Delaware
WHYY News to debut new Delaware documentary, ‘Resurrecting Riverside’
The centerpiece of the effort is tearing down the 300 low-slung rundown units and building a 700-home community called Imani Village.
But the scope encompasses the entire Northeast Boulevard corridor.
There’s a new skills and social/rec center for teens, and a new STEM Hub will open next year on the grounds of a charter elementary school.
Kingswood Community Center, long an anchor for kids and seniors, has broken ground on a $56 million state-of-the-art facility.
An electronics recycling business and a produce store have sprouted, but reviving the boulevard is shaping up as the most serious challenge.
“Our charge is really to drive this vision of a holistic revitalization of the Riverside neighborhood,” said Logan Herring, who runs Kingswood and now oversees REACH Riverside while guiding the revival.
“And so that includes housing, it is education,” he said. It’s “that cradle-to-college career pipeline, community health, which includes economic vitality, workforce development, economic development, just everything to be a vibrant, thriving neighborhood, not just surviving.”
Lorrie Dennis has already moved from the old Riverside to the new Imani Village.
“I think it will make a difference with people over here,’’ Dennis said while sweeping the sidewalk in front of her new home. “It just seems like when you come across the street, you are in like a new environment. It’s like a new planet.”
Delaware
New Jersey, Delaware among states raising minimum wage in 2025
Nearly half of U.S. states are set to raise their minimum wage at the outset of 2025, boosting pay for millions of workers stretching from California to Maine.
In all, 21 states will raise their wage floors on Jan. 1 in keeping with inflation-adjusted increases or as part of scheduled hikes that take effect at the beginning of each calendar year.
The pay increases will affect about 9.2 million workers, who will gain a combined $5.7 billion over the course of 2025, according to the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute, or EPI.
After the wave of wage hikes, Washington will become the state with the highest minimum wage, offering workers $16.66 per hour. Workers in California and New York will enjoy the second-highest wage floor, as both states implement a minimum hourly wage of $16.50.
Pay increases set to take hold in the new year will bring the wage floor to $15 an hour or higher in Washington, D.C., as well as 10 states, among them Delaware, Illinois and Rhode Island. Those areas play host to one of every three U.S. workers, EPI found.
Overall, the states set to raise their minimum wage on Wednesday include: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, Virginia and Washington.
The nation’s highest wage floors will take effect in some of the nearly 50 cities and other localities that will impose minimum pay hikes.
Twenty-nine cities in California will see pay hikes, including a $17-an-hour wage floor that will take effect in Oakland. Seven localities in Washington will increase their minimum wage, among them the country’s highest wage floor: $21.10 an hour in Tukwila.
The latest round of pay increases, however, will not affect more than a dozen states concentrated in the South that lack a minimum wage or offer a minimum wage that does not exceed the federal minimum of $7.25 per hour.
The last federal minimum wage hike took place in 2009, when Congress raised the pay floor to its current level. When adjusted for inflation, the federal minimum wage stands at its lowest level since February 1956, nearly 70 years ago, EPI found.
Copyright © 2024 ABC News Internet Ventures.
Delaware
15-year-old killed, 16-year-old critically injured in Wilmington shooting Monday night
How to report a crime to Delaware Crime Stoppers
This video details what Delaware Crime Stoppers is and how to report a crime. 8/25/23
Two teens were shot, one fatally, Monday night in Wilmington, police said.
City police were called to the 2300 block of N. Carter St. about 8 p.m. for reports of the shooting.
There, they found a 15- and 16-year-old both critically injured. Both were rushed to the hospital, where the 15-year-old died.
As of Tuesday morning, the 16-year-old was still in critical condition, police said.
The shooting garnered attention on social media, with numerous posts speculating about what happened, who was shot and how many people were injured.
Police have not released any information about potential suspects. Anyone with information is asked to contact Detective Justin Kane at 302-576-3961.
Got a tip? Send to Isabel Hughes at ihughes@delawareonline.com or 302-324-2785. For all things breaking news, follow her on X at @izzihughes_
Delaware
Teen dead, another in critical condition after double shooting in Delaware
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